Superconducting Magnet - History

History

Although the idea of making electromagnets with superconducting wire was proposed by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes shortly after he discovered superconductivity in 1911, a practical superconducting electromagnet had to await the discovery of type-II superconductors that could stand high magnetic fields. The first successful superconducting magnet was built by George Yntema in 1954 using niobium wire and achieved a field of 0.71 T at 4.2 K. Widespread interest was sparked by Kunzler's 1961 discovery of the advantages of niobium-tin as a high Hc, high current winding material.

In 1986, the discovery of high temperature superconductors by Georg Bednorz and Karl Müller energized the field, raising the possibility of magnets that could be cooled by liquid nitrogen instead of the more difficult to work with helium.

In 2007 a magnet with windings of YBCO achieved a world record field of 26.8 teslas. The US National Research Council has a goal of creating a 30 tesla superconducting magnet.

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